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Bolton Valley, Vermont
Night skiing in Bolton Valley, Vermont. (Photo: Indy Pass)
Sponsor Content: Indy Pass

Skiing Is Broken. Can Indy Pass Fix It?

This startup ski pass promises to save what鈥檚 best about skiing, and it costs about what you鈥檇 pay for a single day at a megaresort

Published:  Updated: 
Bolton Valley, Vermont
(Photo: Indy Pass)

If you ski, you know the problem. If you don鈥檛 ski, that problem might be the reason why. Skiing has simply become too expensive, too crowded, too commercial, just too much of what you don鈥檛 like and not enough of what you do. With megaresorts dominating the industry, peak-season lift ticket prices next winter will reach $299鈥攑er听诲补测鈥攁t some spots. Pass prices are also going up way faster than inflation, as are prices for everything from parking to pints. And it鈥檚 not just the cost. The new business of skiing, with so many resorts under common ownership, is sucking the life out of ski culture at big and small resorts alike.

If that sounds like a rant, that鈥檚 because it is. Erik Mogensen doesn鈥檛 hold back when he talks about the challenges skiing faces. He has witnessed the current trajectory of the ski industry firsthand, and he hates to see what鈥檚 happening to a sport he loves. But unlike most ranters, Mogensen has a solution.

It鈥檚 called , and it offers a return to what skiing used to be: affordable outdoor fun that鈥檚 accessible to everyone. 鈥淪kiing shouldn鈥檛 be an exclusive luxury good,鈥 says Mogensen. 鈥淚t should be a way for all of us to connect more deeply with the natural world and with others.鈥

Skiing at Mission Ridge
Erik Mogensen skiing at Mission Ridge, one of the nearly 200 independent resorts on the Indy Pass. (Photo: Cameron Hein)

Here鈥檚 how it works: Indy Pass has partnered with nearly 200 independent ski resorts. Buy the pass鈥攚hich costs barely more than a single day at some megaresorts鈥攁nd get two days of skiing/riding at each destination. That means access to more resorts across the United States, Canada, Japan, and Europe than you could ski in a single season. For beginners and families, it鈥檚 priced low enough to make just a couple visits worthwhile. And for skiers and riders looking to go big, it鈥檚 perfect for stringing together unique, uncrowded resorts on epic road trips or filling weekends in places like the Northeast, where there are lots of small hills close together. For everyone, it鈥檚 a great way to discover real gems, from Mission Ridge in Washington to Jay Peak in Vermont.

But Indy Pass is more than a great deal. It鈥檚 also supporting independent resorts and preserving the ski experience. The win-win is accomplished in two ways. First, Indy Pass returns 85 percent of pass sales revenue to resorts, bolstering the bottom line at small operations. Second, the number of passes sold is limited, which prevents overcrowding and all the parking, lift line, and lodge chaos that plagues megaresorts. The pass sold out last spring in ten days.

Indy Pass
A family warms up by a fire at Antelope Butte in Wyoming. (Photo: Indy Pass)

鈥淚ndy Pass provides an antidote to the overhyped and overcrowded experience that awaits at larger resorts,鈥 says Mogensen. 鈥淚t鈥檚 also crucial to attracting and retaining new and casual participants, who often feel overwhelmed and even unwelcome amid the mayhem of the modern megaresort experience. Finally, it鈥檚 a welcome reminder that an alternative skiing experience still thrives鈥攐ne that offers thrills and challenges, yes, but that also remains humble, welcoming, and down to earth.鈥

You could say that Mogensen鈥檚 passion for skiing鈥攄oing it, teaching it, promoting it, and now rescuing it鈥攊s his life鈥檚 work. The 36-year-old started skiing at age three at Tamarack, a small resort near Buffalo, New York, where he quickly became a community fixture. By his early teens, he was sleeping in the ski school locker room on weekends. But when Mogensen was 16, Tamarack abruptly shut down, leaving an imprint that drives him today. Preserving similar ski areas, he says, 鈥渋s what I was put on this planet to do.鈥

Indy Pass
With Indy Pass, outdoor fun is accessible and affordable at ski destinations like Magic Mountain in Vermont. (Photo: Indy Pass)

Mogensen is well on the way with Indy Pass, which he acquired in 2022. Together with Entabeni Systems, a software company solely serving independent ski areas, which Mogensen also owns, he aims to provide a better experience for skiers and help the resorts he loves thrive.

Priority number one is partnering with even more resorts that deliver the Indy Pass promise: welcoming, uncrowded, independent. Mogensen says the roster of member resorts will be at least to 200 for the 2024鈥2025 season and will offer refunds if it isn鈥檛. You can even get a refund if your favorite resort drops out of the program. Indy also offers a no bank, no interest payment plan so you can spread out the cost.

So what鈥檚 the catch? Only one: pass sales are limited. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the only way to stay true to our mission to preserve the less-crowded nature of member resorts,鈥 says Mogensen. “We could likely sell double the amount of passes then we do, but we won’t.”

That means you better act fast if you want an Indy Pass for next season. The 2024鈥2025 pass goes , and despite a cap on sales, the price remains wildly reasonable鈥攋ust $349, which is about what you鈥檇 pay for a single day and lunch at some megaresorts.

Indy Pass
Erik Mogensen is on a mission to save independent ski resorts. (Photo: Shane Wilder)

So, as you think about where you want to ski or ride next season, consider what you want your experience to be like and what you want the future of skiing to look like. With Indy Pass, you now have a better choice.


The is the fastest-growing multi-mountain pass in the world. It offers 200-plus alpine and nordic resorts across the United States, Canada, Europe, and Japan, each providing two days of skiing or riding. Indy resorts are independent of any significant corporate ownership, and many are owned and operated by multigenerational families, providing a uniquely authentic and affordable skiing experience.

Lead Photo: Indy Pass

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